This Barclays exec disliked the way banks treat the poor so he quit to join a startup that 'champions the underdog'

Anthony Watson has held board level positions at Barclays, Citi,
and Wells Fargo, and served as chief information officer for
Nike.

In short, he is used to dealing with multi-billion dollar balance
sheets and huge technology budgets.

But the 39-year-old's latest position is on a very different
scale — Watson is CEO and President of 10-month-old Bitreserve, a
startup aiming to harness the technology behind bitcoin to create
the "internet of money."

Bitreserve is on Wednesday re-branding as Uphold and opening up
its platform to the mainstream.

Until today its digital wallets could only be stocked with
bitcoin (although this could be converted to 24 currencies). But
now Uphold lets you upload cash from traditional bank accounts
and credit cards across 33 European countries, including the UK.
US and Chinese accounts will be available in November.

Aside from storing money online, Uphold's big selling point is it
lets you transfer internationally and switch between currencies
for free.

Business Insider sat down with Watson earlier this month to hear
about the new service, why Watson decided to join the company,
how his homosexuality has shaped his approach to the world, and
how he hopes Uphold can tackle the "injustices in the financial
system."

"Those who can least afford it always pay the most"

Watson, a gregarious and confident British-American, credits the
2008 crash with helping inspire his decision to join Uphold by
highlighting the flaws within the world of banking.

"When the financial crash happened, I was on the board of [US
bank] Wachovia in Hong Kong," said Watson, who speaks with a
quasi-Irish accent after studying there. "I was summoned to a
meeting with the Hong Kong regulatory authority and basically
governments were calling in their loans.

"It’s one thing when a business wants to call in their loan. When
a government calls in their loans we’re talking multiple billions
of dollars. And when multiple governments call in their loans
it’s a very different conversation. I got on a plane on Hong Kong
not knowing if I’d have a job when I landed in Charlotte, North
Carolina."

Wells Fargo ended up buying Wachovia. Watson stayed for a bit,
then did a five-year stint at Barclays running their technology
across Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. But he decided he'd
had enough of banking. He was disillusioned with the fact that
the world of finance hadn't changed since the crash and was still
carrying the same risks as before.

"At that point I said, you know what? I’m done with financial
services," Watson explains. "I don’t like the business model, I
don’t like how they operate, I don’t like the fact that those who
can least afford it always pay the most, I don’t like the risks
that banks pose to global economies. Nothing has fundamentally
changed [since the financial crisis]."

'A bitcoin company? No thanks'

After Barclays, Watson went to Nike as chief information officer
for just under a year, before leaving for personal reasons. It
was then that Halsey Minor, the founder of Bitreserve, approached
him.

Minor is a well-known US entrepreneur who founded consumer
electronic website CNET in the 1990s (sold to CBS for $1.8
billion in 2008). He was an early investor in Salesforce.com, and
founded Grand Central Communications, which became Google Voice
when it was acquired by the search giant.

But he was skeptical at first. Watson says: "When Halsey reached
out to me, I was thinking, ‘A bitcoin company? No thanks, I’ve no
interest in bitcoin.' But he said no wait let me explain."

Uphold founder and
chairman Halsey Minor.Bitreserve

Halsey launched Bitreserve in 2014 as a way to harness the
blockchain technology that underpins bitcoin to makes money
transfers cheap and simple. In fact, Bitreserve's technology that
works with the blockchain means transfers are completely free.

To Minor, this is also about making financial services fairer for
everybody, something that chimed with Watson.

Watson says: "We met at the Ivy Club [a restaurant in London's
Covent Garden] and after 10 minutes I knew immediately it was
what I wanted to do. His vision to transform the broken financial
system and integrate legacy fractured systems of today with the
future of money, and how that benefits everybody in society, just
spoke to me."

"I wanted to get involved with something that made a demonstrable
difference. I’m at that age now, I’m 39. I wanted to give back."

"Let me be clear, we’re not just doing this to make money"

Uphold, as it's now known, is trying to rethink the way a bank
should operate, with the everyday customer in mind rather than
investors or wealthy individuals.

Once customers put money into their accounts, they're free to
send it to any other member on the platform, and free to convert
it into 21 other currencies and 4 commodities. Transfers are at
the best market rate and Uphold charges no commission or fees.

The only charges people incur are when money is taken off
the platform, but even then people can withdraw up to £8,000
($12,278) a year for free and above that only a 0.5% fee is
charged.Customers
can transfer money to virtual currency cards at market rates with
no commission.Uphold

Watson explains how Uphold can do it: "People forget it doesn’t
cost you to buy [money] at the mid-market rate, it’s what
everyone pays. For example, a bank will buy $500 (£326) at the
mid-market rate, no one can buy less than that unless someone is
taking a hit somewhere.

"But then they add a forex fee to that and they add a conversion
fee and a percentage and before you know it that $500 they
bought, they’re charging you $570 (£371) for it. That’s how banks
and transfer services make their money. That’s not our business
model."

Uphold's makes its money simply by keeping as much money as it
can in people's accounts and earning a modest profit from the
interest. The downside of this is customers don't earn any
interest on money held in accounts.

Traditional banks hold only a fraction of total customer
deposits, between 7-11%, but Uphold will keep all client money
rather than investing any. Watson says: "Let me be clear, we’re
not just doing this to make money. We’re trying to make a
profitable enterprise that is of value add to the world. There
are other ways of obviously building businesses like this, but we
believe this is the most fair and equitable way."

'I’ve always been a champion of the underdog'

Watson is most passionate when talking about how Uphold can give
a better deal to the downtrodden and poor who are under-served by
banks at the moment.

A typical polemic runs: "Look at the remittance corridor between
the Mexico and the USA, it’s about $25 billion a year. The fees
that are charged are around $2.5 billion a year. So basically
it’s cost 10% to send money between Mexico and the USA. Why?
There’s no fundamental reason.

"Those in our society who can least afford it, Mexican immigrants
who demographically aren’t on the highest payrolls, are paying
fees you or I wouldn’t in our dizziest day dreams. It’s just
wrong. Those are the injustices in the financial system that
we’re trying to tackle and we believe our model is very
compelling because we’re real time, we’re free, we’re
transparent."

Our hour-long conversation is peppered with declarations like
this. Watson says it's his personal background that makes him so
passionate about giving a fair deal to everyone in society.

Watson
at the recent GLAAD international party in
London.Anthony
Watson/Twitter

Watson studied theology at university and planned to become a
priest before realising he was gay. He's now an outspoken
advocate for LGBT rights, sitting on the board of GLAAD, an LGBT
homeless charity in the UK, and chairing the European diversity
awards.

"I’ve always been a champion of the underdog. I’ve faced
discrimination in my life and I’ve overcome it. I don’t say it in
a way of “oh look at me, boohoo.” No one ever promised you life
was going to be easy."

"It’s a very important part of who I am. That’s why I’m very
sensitive when any minority or are group are marginalised by
society. You should be treated equitably and fairly no matter who
you are, what you do or where you do it, as long as you don’t do
evil to your fellow man you should be left alone to do what you
do."

But there is a lot of inequality and unfairness in financial
services.

Watson says: "The person who lives in Brixton will pay a very
different interest rate to someone who lives in Knightsbridge.
You can’t say you’re publicly discriminating against somebody but
your postcode tells a lot about you. It talks about your
demographic, your income. It’s not the rich white guy like me
that pays the most, it’s the person who can least afford it."

'Financial services will become broadly as simple as sending
email'

Up until now Uphold has only been open to the bitcoin community,
but has been hugely popular within it. The platform has processed
over $400 million (£260.95 million) worth of bitcoin transactions
between its 25,000 members, around 22% of all available bitcoin.

Watson is hoping that by opening up the service to traditional
finance it can help the platform go more mainstream and he is
hoping Uphold becomes as revolutionary in banking as models like
Wikipedia have been in online publishing.

He says: "I believe financial services will become broadly as
simple as sending email. If you think about it, in the mid-1990s
your industry" — meaning the media — "went through a huge
upheaval. People were saying you can’t give content away, that’s
how we make money. Nobody pays for content anymore."

Uphold has trademarked the phrase "Internet of Money" and Watson
promises deposits and money transfers will only be the start. A
physical and digital Visa card linked to the account will launch
later this year.

Uphold has raised $22 million (£14.3 million) since launch,
including $10 million (£6.5 million) through crowdfunding in the
UK, and Watson says the company isn't looking for any more
investment.

"People have approached us — one major US bank has approached us
— but we’re not interested. We’re not here to make a fast buck,
we’re here to change the world. Nothing would make me as proud as
to leave a legacy behind that we helped make the financial world
a fairer place.

"I think it's important that those of us who have been successful
in life have an obligation to give back and this is part of me
giving back."